enttrio.blogg.se

Mississippi fire dogs
Mississippi fire dogs










Everything he did‚ he did with his family in mind. His favorite subject? Daniel 3: 19-25‚ ‘The fourth Man in the Fire’. His dedication did not stop with the fire department he loved his church family and for a while lead the evening devotions at our church. This was his calling and he went forth with a fervor that had everyone else being swept along in his wake. Then in 2005 he was elected as Assistant Fire Chief‚ #902‚ for Bynum Volunteer Fire Department. He became a certified Emergency Medical Responder in 2000 that eventually lead him to truck/station captain. In a brief summary‚ Jimmy joined Bynum in 1997 and graduated from the Mississippi State Fire Academy in 1998. I found a man who was more than a husband he was a best friend‚ a lover‚ the true half of my soul. And in those short years together‚ his stepson found a father who instilled values into him and his son found an idol. We had two boys‚ Caleb‚ 11‚ and Blake‚ 4. If I was to highlight the years I spent with him it could only be summed in these few words‚ ‘The things he did‚ he did so others may live.’ There is a lot to be said about Jimmy and his involvement‚ not only with the fire department‚ but with church and family. was a firefighter for Bynum for eight years.

mississippi fire dogs

There is no profile listed for this fallen firefighter. The team went out of business following the 2002 season.Posted June 9th, 2014 by NFFF & filed under Uncategorized. The Fire Dogs won two league titles during their short life-span, conquering the IPFL (under Fourcade) in 2000 and the NIFL (under Favre) in 2001. He also succeeded Fourcade as Head Coach when the franchise jumped to the National Indoor Football League in 2001. The elder Favre was a minority owner in the club. The other “celebrity” associated with the Fire Dogs was Irvin Favre, father of Green Bay Packers All-Pro quarterback Brett Favre. There were a couple of intriguing names associated with the Fire Dogs. During the team’s first two seasons in the IPFL, the General Manager, Head Coach and starting quarterback was former NFL quarterback John Fourcade. Missisippi won the IPFL championship under Fourcade in 2000. After two seasons, the Fire Dogs ditched the struggling IPFL for the equally anonymous National Indoor Football League (2001-2007).

MISSISSIPPI FIRE DOGS PROFESSIONAL

The franchise started out in 1999 in the Indoor Professional Football League (1999-2001), which featured teams in the Deep South and Pacific Northwest. In this sense, the Fire Dogs were a pretty typical ankle-biter entry.

mississippi fire dogs

And they typically didn’t last very long. These leagues – often derisively referred to as “ankle biters” by diehard AFL fans – typically set up shop in small Midwestern and Southern cities with underutilized civic centers.

mississippi fire dogs

Starting in the late 1990’s, a rash of low-budget knockoffs of the pioneering Arena Football League sprang up around the country. The Mississippi Fire Dogs were an obscure indoor football outfit that played four seasons in the Gulf Coast city of Biloxi from 1999 through 2002. National Indoor Football League (2001-2002) Indoor Professional Football League (1999-2000)










Mississippi fire dogs